Community Asset Preservation Corporation (CAPC) is a non-profit organization that acquires vacant and abandoned properties to stabilize and revitalize communities. CAPC partners with local community builders and contractors to rehabilitate and return properties to productive use as quality, affordable housing. Learn more about CAPC and our history stabilizing New Jersey neighborhoods.

Our Impact

CAPC returns 50 to 75 units of housing to the market each year. Learn more about our impact on communities throughout New Jersey.

Available Housing

CAPC has apartments, condominiums, and homes available throughout the state. Learn more about available units in your community.

Working Together to Transform New Jersey

Community Asset Preservation Corporation (CAPC) is a non-profit organization that acquires vacant and abandoned properties to stabilize and revitalize communities. CAPC partners with local community builders and contractors to rehabilitate and return properties to productive use as quality, affordable housing. Learn more about CAPC and our history stabilizing New Jersey neighborhoods.

Our Impact

CAPC returns 50 to 75 units of housing to the market each year. Learn more about our impact on communities throughout New Jersey.

Available Housing

CAPC has apartments, condominiums, and homes available throughout the state. Learn more about available units in your community.

recent capc news

"About 40 percent of the District’s lower-income neighborhoods experienced gentrification between 2000 and 2013, giving the city the greatest “intensity of gentrification” of any in the country, according to a study released Tuesday by the National Community Reinvestment Coalition." ... See MoreSee Less

"...Oregon became the first state in the U.S. to implement universal rent control. Senate Bill 608, signed in to law by Governor Kate Brown, will restrict annual rent increases to 7 percent and ban what are known as “no-cause” evictions, in an attempt to provide immediate, widespread relief to the state’s rent-burdened households." ... See MoreSee Less

"Legislation sponsored by a pair of state lawmakers from Newark that would allow county homelessness trust funds to be used for Code Blue emergency shelter services was signed into law by Gov. Phil Murphy..." ... See MoreSee Less

"Many of the cities with the strongest gains relative to their historical averages are found in California, with particularly sharp growth continuing in the San Francisco Bay Area. For the second consecutive year, Oakland issued permits for about 3,900 units -- approximately four times the city’s annual average." ... See MoreSee Less